Literary usage of Gray-leaf pine

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1.Handbook of West-American Cone-bearers by John Gill Lemmon (1900)"21—Gray-Leaf Pine - - P- Sabiniana, Dougl. Usually small, round-headed trees of
the hot, sloping foothills from Redding southward on both the Coast and ..."

2.Contributions from the United States National Herbarium by United States National Herbarium, United States National Museum (1893)"In the absence of the Nevada nut pino and gray-leaf pine, this species ...
This tree, the gray-leaf pine, was found at many points in the southern Sierra ..."

3.Proceedings of the American Pharmaceutical Association at the Annual Meeting by American Pharmaceutical Association, National Pharmaceutical Convention, American Pharmaceutical Association Meeting (1889)"Pinus Sabiniana—GRAY LEAF PINE, SABINE'S PINE.—Trees of the hot interior foot-hills,
with divided or branching habit, and usually light grayish, ..."

4.The Silva of California by Willis Linn Jepson (1910)"Gray Pine, gray-leaf pine, and Blue Pine are names which interpret the hue of
the foliage. Bull Pine is also in local use, a name indiscriminately applied ..."

5.Plant Names, Scientific and Popular, Including in the Case of Each Plant the by Albert Brown Lyons (1900)"... Gray- leaf Pine, Digger Pine, Nut Pine, the last formerly supplying the chief
food of some of the aborigines. h. P. Lambertiana Dougl. ..."